Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts Celebrates The Music, The Magic, The Love of Motown

Patrice Rushen
Panel Moderator


(Beverly Hills, CA, August 31, 2022) – Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts presents the world premiere of Motown: Celebrating the Music, the Magic, the Love on Saturday, October 1, 2022, 7 p.m., at The Wallis’ Bram Goldsmith Theater.

Immerse yourself in the magic of early Motown with a unique opportunity to experience an evening with music trailblazers and icons who will share their rare insights into the phenomenal music, and the stories behind it, that positively impacted people and music around the globe. Motown: Where legends were born and dreams were made!

Created, produced and directed by Karla Gordy Bristol, of Bristol Entertainment, this spectacular  show highlights the early days of Motown Records as only can be told by those truly in the Motown Family.

The show includes a Motown panel, moderated by four-time Grammy nominee Patrice Rushen, featuring artists, writers, producers, and executives including: Brian Holland, hitmaker known for songs including “Stop! In the Name of Love”; Claudette Robinson of The Miracles; Iris Gordy, former Motown Vice President; Janie Bradford, co-writer of “Money That’s What I Want”; and Miller London, pioneering record salesman.

Experience a presentation of nostalgic stories shared by Smokey Robinson, The Temptations’ Otis Williams, The Four Tops’ Duke Fakir, and Martha Reeves “Dancing in the Street,” and relive the days of “Hitsville U.S.A.,” the little house with the big sound as envisioned by Motown Founder and living legend Berry Gordy.  

Smokey Robinson


Dynamic keyboardist Herman Jackson is the evening’s music director. Performing songs that have brought people together for over six decades are singing sensations Grammy-winner Thelma Houston, Brenda Holloway, Scherrie, Lynda & Susaye Former Ladies of The Supremes, and special guests.

Thelma Houston


This incredible show truly celebrates the Music, the Magic and the Love of the Motown story, and will be led by legendary radio personality and Announcer Shadoe Stevens and Master of Ceremonies, Emmy Award-winning news anchor Pat Harvey. 

Pat Harvey
Master of Ceremonies


Motown: Celebrating the Music, the Magic, the Love, a Bristol Entertainment Production, is supported by Sony Music Group and The Berry Gordy Foundation for Truth and Justice.

Tickets for Motown: Celebrating the Music, the Magic, The Love ($29 - $99) are sold out. To be added to the waitlist, please emailed Ticket Services at tickets@thewallis.org. The Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts is located at 9390 N. Santa Monica Blvd, Beverly Hills.

The Wallis is closely monitoring the ever-changing local health and safety environment carefully and addressing known health factors at the moment. Should plans change and any performance be required to be postponed or cancelled or if venue capacity limitations are instituted, ticket holders will be notified immediately with options for their purchased tickets per The Wallis' ticketing policies.

The health and safety of patrons, our staff, and artists inside and outside the venue are a top priority for The Wallis, which is requiring all patrons to provide, upon entry, proof of full vaccination or a negative PCR test result within 48 hours or a verifiable Antigen test within 24 hours from your performance date, along with a government issued photo ID. Facial masks, covering both the mouth and nose, are still required at all times while within the venue. The Wallis' health and safety protocols are also subject to change at the venue's sole discretion or in accordance with LA County and City of Beverly Hills regulations. Current Health & Safety Protocols and updates may also be accessed at TheWallis.org/Safety. Policies are subject to change. 

About Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts: 

Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts is a dynamic cultural hub and community resource where local, national and international artists share their artistry with ever-expanding audiences. The campus, located in the heart of Beverly Hills, CA, is committed to robust and distinctive presentations and education programs curated with both creativity and social impact in mind. Distinguished by its eclectic programming that mirrors the diverse landscape of Los Angeles and its location in the entertainment capital of the world, The Wallis has produced and presented more than 350 theater, dance, music, film, cabaret, conversation, and family entertainment programs since its doors opened in October 2013. Hailed as “au courant” (LaLa Magazine), The Wallis was lauded by Culture Vulture, which proclaims, “If you love expecting the unexpected in the performing arts, you have to love The Wallis.” Its programming has been nominated for 79 Ovation Awards and nine L.A. Drama Critics Circle Awards. The campus itself, a breathtaking 70,000-square-foot facility, celebrating the classic and the modern, has garnered six architectural awards. Designed by acclaimed architect Zoltan E. Pali (SPF:architects), the restored building features the original 1933 Beverly Hills Post Office (on the National Register of Historic Places), which serves as the theater's dramatic yet welcoming lobby, and includes the contemporary 500-seat, state-of-the-art Bram Goldsmith Theater; the 150-seat Lovelace Studio Theater; an inviting open-air plaza for family, community and other performances; and GRoW @ The Wallis: A Space for Arts Education, where learning opportunities for all ages and backgrounds abound. Together, these elements embrace the city's history and its future, creating a performing arts destination for L.A.-area visitors and residents alike. Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts is led by Chairman of the Board Michael Nemeroff and Executive Director & Chief Executive Officer Rachel Fine.

For more information about The Wallis, please visit: TheWallis.org.

EDITORS PLEASE NOTE:


WHAT:

Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts Presents

Motown: Celebrating the Music, the Magic, the Love (World Premiere)

Created, produced and directed by Karla Gordy Bristol


FEATURED MOTOWN ARTISTS/WRITERS/PRODUCERS/EXECUTIVES (in alphabetical order):

Shelly Berger

Janie Bradford

Duke Fakir

William Goldstein

Iris Gordy

Brian Holland

Brenda Holloway

Thelma Houston

Miller London

Scherrie, Lynda  & Susaye Former Ladies of The Supremes

Martha Reeves

Paul Riser

Claudette Robinson

Smokey Robinson

Otis Williams


MASTER OF CEREMONIES/MODERATOR/ANNOUNCER (in alphabetical order):

Pat Harvey, master of ceremonies

Patrice Rushen, panel moderator

Shadoe Stevens, announcer 


WHEN:

Saturday, October 1, 7 pm

WHERE:

Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts

Bram Goldsmith Theater

9390 N. Santa Monica Boulevard

Beverly Hills, CA 90210


RUN TIME:

Approximately 150 minutes, including a 20-minute intermission

TICKET PRICES AND INFORMATION:

$29 - $99

SOLD OUT

Join the waitlist by emailing Ticket Services at tickets@thewallis.org.

PLEASE NOTE:

Due to current health and safety variables, performances are subject to change, postponement or cancellation.


                                                                                          # # #


Thursday, August 4, 2022

CTG's 2022-23 Kirk Douglas Theatre Season


The season begins with a historic new works festival the L.A. Writers’ Workshop Festival with an all-women cohort of 10 writers in September 2022.


2022 Pulitzer Prize Finalist play “Kristina Wong, Sweatshop Overlord”

Written by Kristina Wong

Directed by Chay Yew

A co-production with East West Players

in March and April 2023


A fresh take on the play “Fetch Clay, Make Man”

Written by Will Power

Directed by Debbie Allen

Produced in association with SpringHill

in June and July 2023


The West Coast premiere of “Our Dear Dead Drug Lord”

Written by Alexis Scheer

Directed by Lindsay Allbaugh

Produced in association with IAMA Theatre Company

in August and September 2023


The 2022-2023 Kirk Douglas Theatre Season was unveiled today as Center Theatre Group Managing Director / CEO Meghan Pressman joined Center Theatre Group’s Associate Artistic Directors Luis Alfaro, Lindsay Allbaugh, Tyrone Davis, Neel Keller, and Kelley Kirkpatrick to share the upcoming programming for the Culver City theatre.

The season will begin with the L.A. Writers’ Workshop Festival, which is set to take place over the course of two weekends, September 9-11 and September 16-18, 2022. For the first time in the history of Center Theatre Group’s L.A. Writers’ Workshop, all 10 playwrights in the group will have their work presented at the Douglas. This notable cohort of 10 women writers includes Jami Brandli, June Carryl, Penelope Lowder, Lisa Ramirez, Jessica Ko, Pia Shah, Judy Soo Hoo, Delanna Studi, Julie Taiwo Quarles, and Tisha Marie Reichle-Aguilera. 

A 2022 Pulitzer Finalist, Kristina Wong, will return to the Douglas from February 12 to March 12, 2023 in a co-production with East West Players in “Kristina Wong, Sweatshop Overlord.” Emmy® Award winner Debbie Allen will make her Center Theatre Group directorial debut with Will Power’s “Fetch Clay, Make Man,” produced in association with SpringHill from June 4 to July 2, 2023. Rounding out the 2022-2023 Season is the West Coast premiere of Alexis Scheer’s “Our Dear Dead Drug Lord,” from August 20 to September 17, 2023.  

“The Kirk Douglas Theatre presents bold, authentic, and engaging works, and this season our Artistic Team has created a thrilling lineup of innovative artists making work that breaks boundaries and unites people through the power of their storytelling,” said Center Theatre Group Managing Director / CEO Meghan Pressman. “These three vibrant productions, paired with works from the outstanding playwrights in our L.A. Writers’ Workshop Festival, center human connection and celebrate the vibrancy and diversity of Los Angeles.” 

“We believe that theatre creates the energy that feeds a city, a culture, and a society. This season’s programming at the Douglas focuses on using the art of theatre to broaden horizons and illuminate new perspectives,” the five Associate Artistic Directors stated.  “We are grateful to our theatre community for challenging and engaging with us as we set out to honor the commitments to our global majority community. This season, we have also intentionally partnered with like-minded organizations on each production, as we believe that collaboration is vital to our L.A. theatre ecology.” 

The L.A. Writers’ Workshop Festival includes a variety of stories from women playwrights ranging from female magicians, the exploration of American singer/songwriter and activist Nina Simone, the kinship of teachers, trademarking African culture, as well as Cherokee circular storytelling, to name a few. 

Center Theatre Group’s 2019 Dorothy and Richard E. Sherwood Award winner Kristina Wong returns to the Douglas with a co-production with East West Players of her Pulitzer Prize-Finalist play, “Kristina Wong, Sweatshop Overlord.” In this solo show — directed by Chay Yew and with additional support from the Skirball Cultural Center — the COVID-19 pandemic takes a twist with a sewing squad that borders on a feminist utopia or a doomsday cult all with the goal of fixing the U.S. public health care system while in quarantine one mask at a time from a Koreatown apartment. Wong explores and reflects what we have been through and imagines what we want to become with hilarity and generosity.

Produced in association with SpringHill, Will Power’s “Fetch Clay, Make Man” brings together two unlikely celebrities: boxer Cassius Clay (better known as Muhammad Ali) and Hollywood star Stepin Fetchit. Set in the 1960s at the height of the Civil Rights Movement, these two drastically different people combine young and old to discover how public personas shape themselves and how legacies are determined. Tony Award® nominee and Drama Desk Award winner Debbie Allen will stage this powerful production. 

An abandoned tree house, an Ouija board, and a group of teenage girls set the scene for a wild and twisted exploration into the young minds of women where mystery and magic collide in the West Coast premiere of “Our Dear Dead Drug Lord” by Alexis Scheer, directed by Center Theatre Group Associate Artistic Director Lindsay Allbaugh and produced in association with IAMA Theatre Company. This fierce comedy shares a riotous perspective of the danger and damage of formative years, as Miami-based girls summon the ghost of Colombian drug cartel leader Pablo Escobar. 

Tickets and subscription packages for the Kirk Douglas Theatre 2022-2023 Season will be on sale at a later date. Tickets — $10 for a reading or $30 for a Festival Pass — are now currently on sale for the L.A. Writers’ Workshop Festival and are available at CenterTheatreGroup.org. 

Monday, July 25, 2022

Draughn Reimagines 'When You Love A Woman'

Advocating systemic change when civil unrest erupted in the midst of a pandemic and economic uncertainty two years ago, R&B-jazz balladeer Ricky Alan Draughn teamed with two-time Grammy nominated produced Chris “Big Dog” Davis (Norman Brown, Will Downing, Najee) and urban-jazz saxophonist Kim Waters to record a timely version of Sam Cooke’s poignant “A Change Is Gonna Come.” On the heels of the recent Supreme Court decision that impedes women’s rights, Draughn dropped another aptly timed musical statement, this one celebrating women in the form of the new single “When You Love A Woman,” produced by Billboard hitmaker Adam Hawley.

The 1988 power pop ballad written and recorded by Journey serves as Draughn’s source material. Anchored by the crooner’s emotive tenor vocals, Draughn belts out an impassioned salute amidst a throwback adult contemporary track featuring a grandiose gospel choir (Kevin Monroe & Devotion), sweeping strings, and Hawley’s piercing electric guitar solo. The cinematic single illumined by cascading melodies and Draughn’s emotional fervor was one of the most added new singles last week on the Billboard BDS chart.        

“I wanted the song to celebrate women and to be played as a backdrop to honor that special female. I wanted to bring back a memory of simpler days with a refreshing reboot of a classic tune. I’ve always loved that 1980s soft rock era when a song had a lyrical composition that was just as impactful as the melody. ‘When You Love a Woman’ was such a song. We arranged the background vocals specifically to allow for general interpretation and not just for a romantic relationship. My hope is that the single becomes an anthem in the wake of women’s rights currently being threatened,” said Draughn, who released an accompanying video for the single directed by Edwin Escobar (https://bit.ly/3uR5lyU).

While the single is brand new, Draughn has been performing the song in concert with his twelve-piece band for years. He usually closes his sets with it, bringing down the house with his captivating performance, making it one of his most requested songs.

Tapping Hawley to bring his vision for “When You Love A Woman” to life proved to be a perfect match for Draughn. 

“Adam and I got together, and he was almost completing my thoughts. It was like we’ve known each other forever. He is an incredible musician and a pleasure to work with. As a result, the song came together very quickly. He understood the assignment, maintained the song's integrity, and left the song intact, ready for my signature vocal arrangements. Adam brought in Carnell Harrell on synths and Dan Needham on drums, and it was magical - that timeless 80's sound was successfully captured,” said Draughn about the first single from his forthcoming debut album, “Genesis 8:5,” which he aims to release first quarter next year. 

Hawley is producing the majority of “Genesis 8:5,” including what Draughn expects will be his next single, “Relentless,” an upbeat original written by the singer that he describes as having “sort of a neo-soul vibe, very danceable.” The album will be eclectic in terms of variety, reflecting Draughn’s stylistic range and sphere of influence. He’s composing most of the music although he anticipates there will also be several collaborations.

Mixing jazz, R&B, pop, and gospel, Draughn emerged from singing with prominent gospel groups such as Mighty Clouds of Joy and Mississippi Mass Choir. He’s performed at marquee venues, from the Blue Note to the Apollo Theater. He has shared the stage with R&B, funk, and jazz stars, including George Clinton, Chaka Khan, Shirley Murdock, Jodeci, The Whispers, Macy Gray, War, Nancy Wilson, Lou Rawls, Wilson Pickett, Marion Meadows, and Alex Bugnon, among others.



 

Thursday, July 21, 2022

Kevin Hart and Charlamagne Tha God's SBH Productions Present: 'Summer of '85'


 


SUMMER OF ‘85 is told in alternating storylines; Live Aid – the first global benefit concert to support Ethiopians suffering from famine and the MOVE bombing where Philadelphia’s first black mayor dropped a literal bomb on a residential neighborhood and destroyed two+ city blocks.  Audible.com/summerof85

Featuring candid interviews with participants like Bob Geldof, Patti LaBelle, and Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, the series will explore the good intentions, ill intentions, and intentions gone awry during those two months. SUMMER OF ’85 is a deep dive into the complex history that resulted in these outlier events paired with proximity and a combustible mix of ego, altruism, prejudice, utopian dreams, and human frailty. 

Chapters feature a mix of archival footage, interviews with direct participants in the events, and original reporting. By juxtaposing these two events, this story reveals core human contradictions of independence, delusions of grandeur, generosity, government violence, structural and overt racism, and how often good intentions can have intensely complicated legacies. 

Chapters Include: 

1. MOVE: Backstory 

2. Live Aid: Backstory 

3. MOVE: A New Problem 

4. MOVE: The Siege 

5. Live Aid: Announcement 

6. Live Aid: The Day 

7. MOVE: The Aftermath 

8. Live Aid: The Aftermath 


 


Thursday, June 16, 2022

'King James' Rules At The Mark Taper Forum

(l-r) Glenn Davis and Chris Perfetti in 'King James'
photo by Craig Schwartz Photography


By Darlene Donloe

King James sneaks up on you.

It starts off like it’s going to be about basketball, and in a way it is. But it’s so much more.

In reality, King James, now playing at the Mark Taper Forum through July 3, 2022, is really a play about friendship with basketball as a backdrop.

This is the story.

Basketball great “King” LeBron James’s reign in Cleveland brings promise, prosperity, and renewal to a city in desperate need of all three. It also brings together two men who communicate best when they are talking and arguing about sports.

King James, directed by Kenny Leon, is an intimate exploration of the place that sports and athletes occupy in our emotional lives and relationships. It explores the star player’s impact on Cleveland, from his rookie season to the city’s historic championship, and the lives of these two unlikely friends (Shawn and Matt) whose turbulent relationship is best navigated through their shared love of the sport in a verbal game of one-on-one. LeBron James is never seen in the show, but he serves as a symbol for the hopes, desires, and fears that they have bottled up since childhood.

The steady-paced show is presented to represent significant moments in James’ career starting with his rookie year, the year he left the Cavs for the Miami Heat when he returned to Cleveland and the year the Cavs won their first NBA championship.

You’d be hard-pressed to find two bigger King James fans than Shawn (Glenn Davis) and Matt (Chris Perfetti). Both men are the ultimate Cleveland Cavaliers fans, who strike up an improbable friendship anchored by their love of sports and their love and hate relationship with LeBron James.

Matt works at La Cave du Vin, an upscale wine bar in Cleveland Heights, where the first act action takes place.

Shawn, a Black writer has heard that Matt has some Cleveland Cavaliers season tickets to sell and is willing to shell out $2,000 to treat himself. You see, even though he’s a die-hard fan, Shawn has never been to a game in person.

Matt wants more money, after all, they are season tickets and he has bills to pay. One thing leads to another and Matt sells Shawn the tickets after he realizes he isn’t a “bandwagon fan.”

He then asks, “who are you going to take?”  Shawn hadn’t exactly thought that part through.  So, the two of them go together and thus start their friendship.

Their friendship hits a snag when Matt, who is white, proclaims that things would be better if LeBron James “knew his place.”  Shawn, who is Black, takes offense to the statement – essentially wondering out loud what Matt means by the perceived racist statement.

The two-part ways and the friendship becomes fractured. However, there is still an attachment because Shawn has struck up a true friendship with Matt’s mother, who owns a novelty store.

(l-r) Chris Perfetti and Glenn Davis in 'King James'
photo by Craig Schwartz Photography


Shawn leaves for Los Angeles to work on a television show and Matt, who said he would never do it, begins working in his family’s eccentric novelty store.

When Shawn returns, he drops by the novelty store and looks up Matt.

Their initial meeting is tense, but things ease up when they decide to play basketball using one of the wicker baskets.

Glenn Davis (one of the artistic directors of Steppenwolf Theatre Company and an ensemble acting member), as Shawn, is believable as a wide-eyed, die-hard fan. He’s the more level-headed of the two and treasures the friendship the two have created.

Chris Perfetti, who stars in Abbott Elementary on ABC, as Matt, plays an equally believable insecure white man. He’s quirky and a bit all over the place, but he has a good heart.

(l-r) Glenn Davis and Chris Perfetti star in 'King James'
photo by Chris Schwartz Photography


The best parts of the show are when the two are debating each other on the merits of LeBron James vs. Michael Jordan.

Matt believes LeBron, even as a rookie, has “already eclipsed Jordan.”  Shawn replies, “He hasn’t done anything yet,” to which Matt says, “Don’t matter. It’s implicational.”

King James is a satisfying two-character comedy/drama. Davis and Perfetti have palpable chemistry, which moves the show forward. You find yourself rooting for both men in their quest for satisfaction. King James is an incredibly enjoyable production helmed by Tony-winner Kenny Leon.

Actually, Khloe Janel is a DJ, standing in a booth offstage, keeping the audience rockin' by playing R&B and pop songs during the pre-show, in between scenes, and during intermission.

King James, directed by Kenny Leon and written by Rajiv Joseph, stars Glenn Davis and Chris Perfetti. 

Todd Rosenthal’s two, vastly different scenic designs are exceptional. Kudos to Samantha C. Jones (costume designer), Lee Fiskness (lighting designer), Rob Milburn, and Michael Bodeen (sound design).

On the DONLOE SCALE, D (don’t bother, O (oh, no), N (needs work), L (likable), O (oh, yeah), and E (excellent), King James gets an E (excellent).

Running time: 1 hour, 45 minutes. There is one 15-minute intermission.

King James, Mark Taper Forum, 135 N. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, 8 p.m., Tues.-Fri.; 2:30 and 8 p.m. Sat.; 1 and 6:30 p.m. Sun.; no Monday performances, through July 3; $30-$110; www.CenterTheatreGroup.org or 213 628 2772 or 213 972-7231.

COVID protocol: Proof of full vaccinations is required. Masks are also required.


 

Tuesday, June 14, 2022

MOJA: A Music Saga Kicks Off Black Music Month

 (Photo Left) Weedie Braimah is a djembefola—a master of the djembe, a West African drum with a hollow wood body and an animal skin stretched and fastened over the top, the origins of which date back to the 12th Century. 

 

MOJA: A Music Saga, the history of Black Music from Africa to America’s Gospel, Blues, Jazz, R&B, Funk, and Hip-Hop is kicking off Black Music Month with the story of Black music and its origins. The eight-volume set rolls out one new audio experience per month this summer.

June delivers Volume 6 of the MOJA epic story. It is perfectly suited for Black Music Month as this music from Africa in America continues to grow, expand, and morph into multiple formats that shape culture through the eras of segregation, race records, and civil rights.  

Featured vocalists on MOJA: A Music Saga, Volume 6 include an eclectic mix of gifted singers from around the world such as Cuban-born Pedrito Martinez,  10 x Grammy Award winners Take 6, England’s Oli Brown, Take 6 soloist Mark Kibble, and Josh Kegler of New Orleans, who give the listener a symphony of black music sounds from Afro Cuban, Doo Wop, Blues, and the British invasion to Rock and Roll to Funk.

MOJA’s emotional stories tug at your soul in their entirety from volume one-8.  The voice actors who bring the troubled, brilliant, yet complicated characters to life are 3x Grammy Nominee, Emmy Award winner, and Blues Hall of Famer Billy Branch who plays the fearless grandfather Innes Ellis, patriarch of the Muziki family, and actor, rapper, singer, and producer, Darius McCrary as Sitano, Innes’ Hip Hop superstar grandson.

MOJA: A Music Saga is a 165-year journey where Billy Branch’s character Iness Ellis, the fourth generation of the Ellis family of musicians in America, unpacks their musical legacy to his grandson Sitano through historically based stories intertwined with the evolution of musical genres of American music rooted in the soul of African music. 

MOJA: A Music Saga is a 75-song musical event that took five years to complete. It utilized the talents of 500 musicians, singers, artists, producers, Grammy Award winners, and nominees from around the globe.

Grammy-nominated musician, producer, writer, and creator of MOJA: A Music Saga, Carl Gustafson said, “Integrity toward the music is paramount. The songs about Africa were recorded in Africa by Africans. The songs of Cuba were recorded in Cuba by Cubans. Same in New Orleans, Chicago, Mississippi, England, and everywhere else the story went.

MOJA: A Music Saga is an audio adventure that skillfully uses skits, sound effects, and original music to tell the story of how African music has influenced American music through seven generations of the Ellis family. The family’s story starts with Moja Musiki, a.k.a. Moja Ellis, a tall, attractive, strong African female drummer who was taken from her home in East Africa and sold into slavery in New Orleans in the 1850s. She survived the perils of slavery and raised her son Billi Ellis using her music skills. The Ellis family gift of music was then passed down to Billi’s daughter, musician and band leader Tattie, her son Innes, and his daughter Tanya, ending in today’s time with Moja’s great-great-grandson, Hip Hop star Sitano and his two-year-old daughter Sabbath.

Gustafson said of the saga wrapped in music, “This story never happened exactly this way, but it happened thousands of times over many hundreds of years. This is the palate that the storyteller, artist, and novelist, works with as the events come back to life.”

Executive produced by two-time Grammy Award-winning Blues great Bobby Rush, and world-renowned Djembe master, Weedie Braimah, MOJA: A Music Saga immerses the listener in an entertaining, dramatic, sometimes gritty, and realistic history lesson of a people and their music, from slavery, reconstruction, Jim Crow and segregation to the civil rights era.

Gustafson adds, “The MOJA saga yanks the guts out of Bobby Rush’s tragic young life and grinds it into grist for the triumphant music story of Black America.”

MOJA: A Music Saga is destined to have an international impact on music lovers and historians alike, changing the world's view of Africa’s influence on American Music forever.

For more information, or to stream or purchase MOJA: A Music Saga visit:  www.mojasaga.com



 


Sunday, June 5, 2022

Los Angeles Women's Theatre Festival Is June 18

 

Hot Off the Press is a program of new solo writings presented by talented scribes in staged readings. The show will be presented at 6 p.m. PDT on Saturday, June 18, 2022. The theme is Fathers, Friends, and Freedom in celebration of the Juneteenth and Father’s Day week-ends. The new program includes: 

Single Black Father. Written and performed by Sandra Booker. A daughter reflects on the past times she had with her father and how he raised her in a single-parent household. 

Love Letters to Las Vegas. Written and performed by Angel Felix. A daughter remembers the memory of her father and the moments they bonded together, especially over their heritage. 

Black Hair Peace. Written and performed by Lynda La Rose. A chronicle of poems from the perspective of a Black woman experiencing her identity through her hair. 

One Woman’s Play. Written and performed by Nataylia Roni. A Black woman’s acceptance of who she is, who she was, and who she will be. 

The program will be hosted by Jahna Houston and Jessica Lynn Johnson.

Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival’s Co-Founder and Executive Producer is Adilah Barnes. 

HOW TO ATTEND: Saturday, June 18, 2022, at 6 p.m. PDT. Hot Off the Press: Fathers, Friends, and Freedom is an exciting evening of new works written and performed by remarkable authors in staged readings. Presented by Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival. Tickets are free. A donation of $10 is suggested. Order at https://lawtf.org . A Zoom link will be sent to attendees after their ticket reservation is confirmed.

The Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival is a non-profit arts organization supported in part by the California Arts Council, LA County Arts and Culture, Lendistry, Department of Cultural Affairs of the City of Los Angeles, City of Culver City, City National Bank, California Wellness Foundation, KPFK 90.7,Women in Media, Union Bank and Adilah Barnes Productions.